“I don’t think it is going to change my documentation burden very much,” Jeffery Ward, MD, chair of the American Society of Clinical Oncology Government Relations Committee, said in an interview. “Their assumption is that I write my notes in order to meet a billing requirement and if I don’t have that billing requirement, I won’t have to write nearly as detailed notes. My notes are written so that if someone else needs to take care of my patient when I am not there, they can step in, read my notes, know what’s going on, and follow the patient.”
Dr. Ward suggested that the real purpose of the proposal is to shift more money to primary care, and raised the concern that the CMS is using this proposal “as a vehicle to take money away from specialists who take care of very complicated patients in order to give it to other people, particularly to primary care.”
ASCO and the Community Oncology Alliance both anticipate a 7%-8% reduction in payments to cancer specialists if this provision takes effect, Dr. Ward said.
Another element of the proposal that is raising concerns among physician groups is a proposed payment reduction when a visit involves more than one service. For example, when a single office visit includes both an E/M code and a procedure code, the proposal calls for the E/M code to be cut in half.
“From the patients’ perspective, the potential threat is that doctors could be incentivized to spend less time with patients or potentially bring patients back for subsequent visits to handle multiple problems,” Angus Worthing, MD, chair of the American College of Rheumatology’s Committee on Government Affairs, said in an interview.
Comments on the proposed update to the 2019 Medicare physician fee schedule are due Sept. 10.